This invention provides stroke-multiplying shape memory alloy actuators and other actuators using electromechanically active materials [collectively referred to in this application as SMA actuators] providing stroke multiplication without significant force reduction, that are readily miniaturizable and fast acting, and their design and use; economical and efficient control and sensing mechanisms for shape memory alloy actuators (including conventional shape memory alloy actuators as well as the stroke-multiplying SMA actuators of this invention) for low power consumption, resistance/obstacle/load sensing, and accurate positional control; and devices containing these actuators and control and sensing mechanisms.
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1. A shape memory alloy actuator, comprising:
a set of stacked parallel conductive plates, wherein each stacked parallel conductive plate is separated from an adjacent stacked parallel conductive plate with an insulating layer configured to provide electrical isolation between adjacent stacked parallel conductive plates and a low-friction sliding surface between adjacent stacked parallel conductive plates; and a set of shape memory alloy links connecting said set of stacked parallel conductive plates, said set of shape memory alloy links generating force to produce controlled sliding displacement along insulating layers between adjacent stacked parallel conductive plates.
2. The shape memory alloy actuator of
7. The shape memory alloy actuator of
8. The shape memory alloy actuator of
9. The shape memory alloy actuator of
10. The shape memory alloy actuator of
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This application claims the priority under 35 USC 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Applications Nos. 60/148,514, entitled "SMA Actuator Design", 60/148,515, entitled SMA Actuator with Teflon Guides", 60/148,516, entitled "Time Domain Resistance Analysis for Realtime SMA Actuator Control", and 60/148,517, entitled "PWM Multiplexing Controller for SMA Actuator Arrays", all filed on Aug. 12, 1999. These applications are incorporated by reference into this application.
(a) Field of the Invention
This invention relates to shape-memory alloy (SMA) actuators and other actuators using electromechanically active materials [collectively referred to in this application as SMA actuators] and to methods for their control. In particular, this invention relates to SMA actuators that are capable of miniaturization to achieve fast (sub-second) response, and to control methods for SMA actuators in general, and also in particular for the miniaturizable SMA actuators of this invention for low power consumption, resistance/obstacle sensing, and positional control.
(b) Description of Related Art
A class of materials was discovered in the 1950s that exhibit what is known as the shape memory effect. See, for example, K. Otsuka, C. M. Wayman, "Shape Memory Materials", Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1998, ISBN 0-521-44487X. These materials exhibit a thermoelastic martensite transformation; i.e. they are pliable below a certain transition temperature because the material is in its martensite phase and can be easily deformed. When their temperature is raised above the transition temperature the material reverts to its austenite phase and its previous shape, generating a large force as it does so. Example of such materials are approximately 50:50 atom percent titanium-nickel (TiNi) alloys, optionally containing small quantities of other metals to provide enhanced stability or to alter the martensite-austenite transition temperatures; and these can be formulated and treated to exhibit the shape memory effect. Other such alloys include Cu/Al/Ni and Cu/Al/Zn alloys, sometimes known as β-brasses. Such alloys are generically referred to as shape memory alloys (SMA) and are commercially available from a number of sources in wire form, with diameters from as low as 37 μm to 1 mm or greater. See, for example, Dynalloy Corp., "Technical Characteristics of Flexinol Actuator Wires", Technical Information Pamphlet Dynalloy Corp., 18662 MacArthur Boulevard, Suite 103, Irvine Calif. 92715, USA.
SMA wires are wires of shape memory alloy that are treated such that they can be easily stretched along their longitudinal axis while in the martensite phase, thus re-arranging their atomic crystalline structure. Once stretched they remain that way until they are heated above their austenite transition temperature, at which point the crystalline structure is restored to its original (remembered) austenite configuration. This reversion not only returns the wire to its original length, but also generates a large force, typically on the order of 50 Kgf/mm2 cross-sectional area, depending on the alloy and its treatment. Because of the large available force per cross-sectional area, SMA wires are normally produced. in small diameters. For example, a 100 μm diameter wire can deliver about 250 g of force. To obtain more force, thicker wires or multiple wires are required.
Although SMAs have been known since 1951, they has found limited commercial actuator applications due to some inherent limitations in the physical processes which create the shape memory properties. This lack of commercial applications is due to a combination of the following factors:
(1) Limited Displacement
A TiNi SMA wire can contract by at most 8% of its length during the thermoelastic martensite to austenite transition. However, it can only sustain a few cycles at this strain level before it fails. For a reasonable cycle life, the maximum strain is in the 3-5% range. As an example, for an actuator with reasonable cycle life, it requires over 25 cm of SMA wire to produce 1 cm of movement.
(2) Minimum Bend Radius
An obvious solution to packaging long lengths of SMA into small spaces is to use some kind of pulley system. Unfortunately SMA wires can be damaged if they are routed around sharp bends. Typically an SMA wire should not be bent around a radius less than fifty times the wire diameter. As an example, a 250 μm diameter wire has a minimum bending radius of 1.25 cm. It should be noted that the term "minimum bending radius" as used here means the minimum radius within which an SMA wire can be bent and still be capable of repeated austenite-martensite cycling without damage. The addition of a large number of small pulleys makes the system mechanically complex, eliminating one of the attractions of using SMA in the first place. Also the minimum bend radius requirement places a lower limit on actuator size.
(3) Cycle Time
An SMA wire is normally resistively heated by passing an electric current through it. The wire then has to cool below its transition temperature before it can be stretched back to its starting position. If this cooling is achieved by convection in still air, then it can take many seconds before the actuator can be used again. The 250 μm wire discussed above has a best cycle time of about 5 seconds or more. Thus, as an example, Stiquito, an SMA powered walking insect [J. M. Conrad, J. W. Mills, "Stiquito: Advanced Experiments with a Simple and Inexpensive Robot", IEEE Computer Society Press, Los Alamitos Calif., USA, ISBN 0-8186-7408-3] achieves a walking speed of only 3-10 cm/min. Since the rate of cooling depends on the ratio of the surface area of the wire to its volume, changes in wire diameter dramatically affect the cycle time.
To overcome these limitations designers of SMA based actuators have typically used long straight wires or coils. See, for example, M. Hashimoto, M. Takeda, H. Sagawa, I. Chiba, K. Sato, "Application of Shape Memory Alloy to Robotic Actuators", J. Robotic Systems, 2(1), 3-25 (1985); K. Kuribayashi, "A New Actuator of a Joint Mechanism using TiNi Alloy Wire", Int. J. Robotics, 4(4), 47-58 (1986); K. Ikuta, "Micro/Miniature Shape Memory Alloy Actuator", IEEE Robotics and Automation, 3, 2151-2161 (1990); and K. Ikuta, M. Tsukamoto, S. Hirose, "Shape Memory Alloy Servo Actuator with Electrical Resistance Feedback and Application for Active Endoscope", Proc. IEEE Int. Conf. on Robotics and Information, 427-430 (1988). Clearly, in many applications, especially where miniaturization is desired, it is impractical to use long straight wires. Coils, although greatly increasing the stroke delivered, significantly decrease the available force; and, to compensate for the drop in force, thicker wires are used which reduce the responsiveness of the resulting actuator, making it unsuitable for many applications.
Other mechanisms commonly used to mechanically amplify the available displacement, such as those disclosed in D. Grant, V. Hayward, "Variable Control Structure of Shape Memory Alloy Actuators", IEEE Control Systems, 17(3), 80-88 (1997) and in U.S. Pat. No. 4,806,815, suffer from the same limitation on available force, again leading to the requirement for thicker wires and the attendant problems with cycle time.
As discussed above, SMA materials can be used as the motive force for an actuator [See, for example, T. Waram, "Actuator Design Using Shape Memory Alloys", 1993, ISBN 0-9699428-0-X], whose position can be controlled by monitoring the electrical resistance of the alloy. See, for example, K. Ikuta, M. Tsukamoto, S. Hirose, "Shape Memory Alloy Servo Actuator with Electrical Resistance Feedback and Application for Active Endoscope", discussed above.
A common method of heating SMA actuators to their transition temperature is pulse width modulation (PWM). In this scheme, a fixed voltage is applied for a percentage of a pre-set period. As the percentage on-time to off-time in a single period (referred to as the duty cycle) is changed, the aggregate amount of power delivered to the SMA can be controlled. This scheme is popular because of the ease with which it can be implemented in digital systems, where a single transistor is all that is required to drive an actuator, obviating the need for digital-to-analog conversion and the associated amplifiers.
In a simple example, a PWM generator supplies PWM pulses to the SMA element at a duty cycle and period specified by a digital controller. During the off period of the PWM pulse, a resistance measuring system measures the resistance of the SMA which is sampled and then held in a sample-and-hold system. This measurement is made in the off cycle because the PWM pulse can be quite short and the controller might not sample the SMA when the pulse is on. Finally, the analog signal in the sample-and-hold system is converted to digital form by an analog-to-digital (A-D) converter, from which it can then be read by the controller. This value is then used by an algorithm in the controller to vary the duty cycle of the PWM generator to achieved a desired position of the SMA element. In systems with more than one SMA element, all of the systems other than the controller need to be replicated for each SMA element, which leads to large, complex and expensive control systems.
Several schemes have been proposed to avoid this replication. The most common is to multiplex the A-D converter across a number of sample & hold circuits, thus only requiring one A-D converter. Another scheme, described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,763,979, uses electronic switches in a row and column configuration to isolate a single SMA element and applies a PWM pulse to each element in turn. This allows for the resistance measuring, sample and hold and A-D subsystems to be shared across all actuators, and also has the advantage of reducing the number of wires required to interconnect the devices. Unfortunately the scheme also doubles the number of high current switching devices since each actuator requires two such channels as opposed to only one in the conventional scheme. These switches are normally the physically largest element of such control systems because of their need to dissipate substantial heat due to their high current operation. So, although this scheme reduces the number of wires, it actually increases the size and complexity of the controller subsystem.
The transition from the martensite (low temperature) phase to the austenite (high temperature) phase in SMAs does not happen instantaneously at a specific temperature but rather progresses incrementally over a temperature range.
However, if two actuators are arranged in an antagonistic fashion, a number of schemes can be used to compensate for the hysteresis. A common scheme described in Dynalloy Corp., "Technical Characteristics of Flexinol Actuator Wires" and U.S. Pat. No. 4,977,886 uses the normalized resistance from both actuators in combination to compensate for the hysteresis. All of these position control schemes rely upon an a priori knowledge of Rmax and Rmin (see FIG. 2). These values change over time as the alloy ages, and also with environmental factors, such that the system has to be recalibrated before each use for useful position control. Calibration is achieved either by the attachment of external sensors to compute Rmax and Rmin at known measured minimum and maximum displacements or, as in U.S. Pat. No. 4,977,886, by applying a current large enough and long enough such that the temperature will exceed Af and record the minimum and peak resistances encountered. The former calibration scheme is impractical for many systems where continuous, low cost operation is required. The latter scheme relies upon knowledge of the physical dimensions of the SMA element, and also its current environment and state (e.g. austenite or martensite) so that the magnitude and duration of the calibration pulse can be calculated.
The disclosures of all documents cited in this section and elsewhere in this application are incorporated by reference into this application.
It would be desirable to develop SMA actuators that are capable of providing substantially the full force of the SMA wires comprising them while achieving a greater stroke (contraction) than is achievable by an SMA wire of the length of the actuator (stroke multiplication without significant force reduction); SMA actuators that are miniaturizable and fast acting; and economical and efficient control and sensing mechanisms for SMA actuators (including conventional shape memory alloy actuators as well as the stroke-multiplying SMA actuators of this invention) for low power consumption, resistance/obstacle/load sensing, and accurate positional control.
This invention provides stroke-multiplying shape memory alloy actuators and other actuators using electromechanically active materials [collectively referred to in this application as SMA actuators] providing stroke multiplication without significant force reduction, that are readily miniaturizable and fast acting, and their design and use; economical and efficient control and sensing mechanisms for shape memory alloy actuators (including conventional shape memory alloy actuators as well as the stroke-multiplying SMA actuators of this invention) for low power consumption, resistance/obstacle/load sensing, and accurate positional control; and devices containing these actuators and control and sensing mechanisms.
In a first aspect, this invention provides a stroke-multiplying shape memory alloy actuator. In embodiments of this first aspect of the invention, the actuator comprises multiple rigid members and shape memory alloy wires.
In a second aspect, the invention provides a stroke-multiplying shape memory alloy actuator comprising a single shape memory alloy wire.
In a third aspect, this invention provides multiplexed control and sensing mechanisms for shape memory actuators.
In a fourth aspect, the invention provides control and sensing mechanisms for, and methods for controlling, shape memory alloy actuators using resistive feedback, in which the change in resistance of the actuator with time as the actuator is energized is used to generate the control information for the actuator. These control and sensing mechanisms and methods may be used for calibration of actuators, executing position control functions, measuring applied loads on actuators, and detecting collisions or mechanical obstructions encountered. by, or system failures in, actuators. In a preferred control mechanism, measurement of the discharge time of a capacitor connected parallel to the actuator is used to measure the resistance of the actuator.
A "shape memory alloy" or "SMA" is an alloy that exhibits a thermoelastic martensite transformation, such that it can be deformed while in the martensite phase and the deformation is recovered when the alloy returns to the austenite phase. SMAs suitable for room temperature applications of this invention are those that have an austenite-martensite transition range somewhat above expected ambient temperature, say a martensite finish temperature of 30-50°C C., so that the SMA will remain in its martensite phase in the absence of applied heating, and an austenite finish temperature that is low enough to be compatible with common engineering plastics, say an austenite finish temperature of 80-100°C C., to minimize the amount of heating (e.g. electrical energy input to the SMA) required to complete the martensite-to-austenite transition. Such alloys are readily commercially available. Alloys with other transition temperature ranges may be chosen for actuators designed to operate at decreased (e.g. below 0°C C.) or elevated (e.g. above 100°C C.) temperature environments, and a person of ordinary skill in the art will have no difficulty, having regard to that skill and this disclosure, in choosing a suitable SMA for a desired purpose. It is well known that, when an SMA element, such as an SMA wire, is deformed within the recoverable range of strain below its Mf temperature, and then heated to above the Af temperature, it will revert to its original undeformed shape. However, re-cooling of the element below the Mf temperature again will not cause reversion to the deformed shape spontaneously--the shape memory effect is a one-way effect. Thus a stress, or bias, needs to be applied to the SMA element for it to revert to the deformed shape as it re-cools below the Mf temperature. Although it will not be generally discussed below in relation to the SMA actuators of this invention, it is to be assumed that a bias is or can be applied to the actuator to cause reversion to the deformed martensitic state as the SMA elements of the actuator cool below the Mf temperature. This bias may be applied either by a spring (a constant bias application, where the actuator has to overcome the force of the spring to cause motion of the actuator as it heats; or by an opposing actuator, where typically one is heated and the other is unheated, but each may be heated to differing extents for precise control). The spring bias is economical, but has the disadvantage that a part of the actuator force is absorbed by the spring, leaving less available for the actuator to apply to an external load; the opposed actuator bias offers greater force availability, since the opposed actuator when unheated takes little force to move, and greater position sensitivity when both are differentially energized, but at a cost in complexity of control and increased power consumption. This is well known in the art; and the SMA actuators of this invention may be used in either mode.
SMA "wire" as used in this application refers to SMA material of elongate form, capable of contraction/elongation along the long axis. Thus the term "wire" does not imply a circular cross-section, although that will be the typical cross-section, but includes cross-sections that may be elliptical, square, rectangular, or the like.
The "stroke" of an SMA actuator is the change in distance between the fully extended length and the fully contracted length of the actuator. If the actuator contains a limit stop(s) to limit either contraction and/or extension of the actuator, then the "stroke" will be the distance between the limit stop(s), which may be less than the "stroke" if no limit stop(s) were present.
A "stroke multiplying" SMA actuator is an SMA actuator in which the stroke of the actuator is greater than the contraction or extension of an SMA wire of the external length of the actuator in the direction of its extension or contraction.
In a first aspect, this invention provides stroke multiplying SMA actuators, i.e. SMA actuators that are capable of providing substantially the full force of the SMA wires comprising them while achieving a greater stroke than is achievable by an SMA wire of the length of the actuator ("length" being defined as the length of the actuator in the direction of the axis of the SMA wires), thereby achieving stroke multiplication without significant force reduction.
This stroke multiplication without significant force reduction enables thin SMA wires to be employed resulting in greatly increased responsiveness due to the non-linear dependence of wire cooling speed on wire diameter. As is well-known in the SMA actuator art, per unit length, the mass of wire to be cooled is proportional to the cross-sectional area of the wire (a function of the square of the wire diameter), while the cooling rate is proportional to the surface area of the wire (a function of the diameter). In fact, this ratio is further complicated by the thermal conductivity of the wire itself, but it can be seen that the rate of cooling of an SMA wire from its Af temperature to its Mf temperature decreases substantially with decrease in wire diameter. This decreases the cycle time of an SMA actuator, since the heat-up time from the Mf temperature to the Af temperature will always be substantially shorter than the cool-down time provided that sufficient power is applied to achieve a rapid heating rate. For example, while a 250 μm diameter wire actuator has a cycle time of 6-7 sec or more, a 50 μm diameter wire actuator has a cycle time of less than about 1 sec, and a 37 μm diameter wire actuator has a cycle time of about 0.4 sec.
The basic design of the stroke multiplying SMA actuator comprises a plurality of parallel, including concentrically arranged, rigid (i.e. non-SMA) members that are free to slide relative to one another, each connected one to another by SMA wires in such a way that the stroke of the actuator is substantially equal to the sum of the strokes of the individual SMA wires.
In a first embodiment, as shown in
For example, if member 301 is fastened rigidly to a substrate and-members 302 and 303 are slidable with respect to each other and to member 301, when the SMA wires are heated and contract, and each contracts about 3%, the ultimate contraction of the assembly, from the attachment point 341 to the attachment point 333, will be about 9%, representing about a three-fold multiplication of displacement with no diminution of the force exerted except for the little lost to friction within the actuator. The design thus delivers the benefits of a long straight wire but in a more compact form, without reducing available force. In addition, the fact that all wires are straight means that the issue of minimum bend radius of the SMA wire is moot, making it possible to miniaturize the assembly to a scale of a few centimeters, for example down to 1 cm or less, and potentially down to microscopic scale.
The rigidity of each of the members needs to be sufficient that the actuator will not buckle as the wires contract, but because the actuator can be encased in a casing preventing buckling of the members (if such a casing if made from or coated with a suitable low-friction polymeric material, such as PTFE or another fluoropolymer, it will also act to provide a low-friction environment for the sliding of the rigid members), no unusual strength is required. An actuator of this type (side-by-side arrangement), as is apparent from the drawing, can be made shallow compared to its length and width, making it especially useful in a confined flat space situation.
Power supply to the SMA wires 311, 312, 313 may be individual to each wire, allowing maximum control of movement and spread of peak power draw (if the wires are energized sequentially, since the current required to heat a wire to its Af temperature is greater than the current required to hold the wire above its Af temperature once that temperature is reached). This is an important consideration in battery powered devices where the life of the battery is dependent to an extent on the rate of current drain; but there is a cost in the need for numerous leads and increased control capacity. Power supply may also, more usually, be from one end of the actuator to the other in a single run, so that only two leads are required and the control simplified. In this situation, points 331 and 332 on member 302, and points 332 and 323 on member 303 need to be electrically connected so that a current may flow from point 321 to point 333, thereby causing all three wires 311, 312, 313 to contract simultaneously when a voltage is applied to points 321 and 333. If the rigid members 301, 302, 303 are non-conductive, appropriate electrical paths (jumper wires) must be provided to make the required electrical connection. If the rigid members are themselves conductive and the SMA wires fastened to them in an electrically conductive way, then the rigid members themselves will serve as the jumpers, but this requires that the SMA wires themselves be electrically insulated or spaced apart from the rigid members except at the attachment points 321, 322, 323, 331, 332 to ensure that current passes completely through the SMA wires.
In a second embodiment, to further minimize the space requirements of the actuator the rigid members can be arranged as concentric tubes with the SMA wires mounted on the outside of the tube as shown in
Clearly both configurations of these concentric tube actuators can be extended by adding additional concentric tubes to the device to achieve larger displacements. To increase the available force delivered multiple parallel SMA wires can be used on the same framework without any penalty in cycle time.
A prototype set of actuators has been constructed at a scale suitable for implementing a six-legged Stiquito-like walking robot. The resulting device can walk at a speed of approximately 1 cm/sec, which compares very favorably with Stiquito's 3-10 cm/min. In this embodiment, the concentric tubes used in these actuators were made from aluminum. The outer tube had a length of 4 cm, an outside diameter of 2.4 mm, and the actuator produced a stroke of at least 3.2 mm. The SMA wire was anchored to the aluminum tubes using small brass nuts and bolts of size 00-90. The SMA used was a Flexinol TiNi alloy (Dyalloy, Inc.), with a diameter of 50 μm, producing a force of 35 g. The SMA was heated using a 1 KHz PWM signal that delivered a maximum of 110 mA at an amplitude of 6V. Certain of the actuators (those responsible for bearing the weight of the robot) had two parallel SMA wires attached to the tubes and so delivered a force of 70 g. The cycle time for both types of actuator was approximately 0.7 sec.
In a more preferred third embodiment, the actuator consists of a set of stacked parallel plates electrically insulated from one another and joined by SMA wires. The construction of such an actuator is shown in
A variation on the actuator shown in
Although the actuator (like all SMA actuators of this invention) operates by contraction of the SMA wire as it is heated, so that the actuator decreases in length as shown in
In this variation of
A feature that is available to minimize the total voltage required to drive a multi-plate actuator as the number of plates increases is to use an odd number of plates (even number of SMA wires) and, instead of applying power to the actuator between the outermost plates (where the resistance of the actuator, assuming the plate resistance to be significantly lower than the wire resistance, will be the sum of the resistances of all the wires), electrically linking the outermost plates and applying power between these two outermost plates and the middle plate (where the resistance of the actuator will then be one-half the sum of the resistances of all the wires). This enables use of a lower supply voltage, although the current draw will be doubled.
In a second aspect, this invention provides a single-wire stroke-multiplying SMA actuator that achieves stroke multiplication without substantial force reduction and without resorting to a mechanically complex solution like pulleys or to mechanisms that reduce the available force.
The basic design of this aspect of the invention, as shown schematically in
A variation on this aspect is to use a narrow gauge tubing 931, 932; made from or internally coated with a polymer such as PTFE or other fluoropolymer and having an internal diameter slightly greater than the diameter of the SMA wire, to encase the wire as it passes over the tubes/rod 901, as illustrated in
An example of how such actuators can be implemented is shown schematically in FIG. 12. Here four actuators are used in an antagonistic configuration to implement a two degrees of freedom joint such as might be used on a robotic hip joint. SMA wires 1201, 1202, 1203, and 1204 (not shown because obscured in this Figure by limb 1221) pass over low friction tubes/rods 1211, 1212, 1213, 1214 respectively, which are mounted on plate 1200. A similar plate and set of rods form the "back" of the actuator (shown but not numbered). Only the ends of the wire extending from the "front" of the actuator over the tubes/rods are shown, to minimize complexity and simplify understanding of the Figure, though the arrangement for each SMA wire is the same as that shown more completely in FIG. 9. By powering the SMA wires, the distal end 1223 of limb 1221, which limb is articulated from the plate 1200 through a joint 1222 such as a ball-and-socket joint, can be made to move up or down, left or right, as illustrated by the arrows at the end of the limb. Powering the SMA wires in combination can produce any desired diagonal or curved motion.
When many actuators are required in a small space the framework and tubing can be shared by multiple actuators; for example, by an opposed pair of actuators moving over the same rods but with the SMA wires leading out opposite sides of the framework. In such a case, the actuators can be independent wires, so that they are independently activated, thereby reducing the size of the paired actuator system. It is also possible to use a single wire for a pair of actuators in such a configuration, where the wire is fixed at its center. If that center is an electrical contact, each half of the wire may be independently powered, resulting in a paired but independent dual actuator system (though of course both actuators could be activated simultaneously). If that center is not used as an electrical contact, or if both endpoints of the wire are electrically linked, so that in either event the whole wire is powered, then the result is a single actuator moving and exerting a contractile force on two opposed points. Such configurations are particularly useful for symmetrical devices; such as a pair of legs on opposite sides of a multi-legged walking robot, such as an insect, spider, or centipede; and it will be readily conceivable that paired actuators can be arranged so that the opposite legs move simultaneously in one direction, e.g. both forward at once, or in opposite directions, e.g. one forward and one backward. In such specialized uses, the number of actuators and the complexity of the operating circuitry can be reduced by use of paired actuators as described here and elsewhere in this application.
In a third aspect, this invention provides a very compact and simple controller mechanism for arrays of SMA actuators that are heated using the PWM scheme and which use resistance as the feedback mechanism (a technique well-known in the art, and illustrated schematically in FIG. 13). In
This invention avoids the duplication of high current switches required by methods such as those disclosed by U.S. Pat. No. 5,763,979 discussed above and that illustrated in
In this aspect of the invention, as illustrated schematically in
A second change from conventional design is that the inputs to the resistance measuring system 1405 are multiplexed so that the resistance measuring system and A-D converter are shared amongst all actuators. In this way, only the PWM driver 1402 is replicated for each SMA element 1403 (as shown in the dashed box). The interrupt that causes a new A-D conversion to start also selects the next actuator in turn to be sampled by programming the multiplexer 1407. Therefore, during each PWM period exactly one actuator is sampled, and when the controller initiates the conversion the PWM signal is certain to be "on". In addition, since the resistance measuring system is behind a multiplexer which is switched on only when the pulse is high it can be very simple. For example, it may comprise only a single resistor. This compares favorably with the complex current source and bridge circuits used in K. Ikuta, M. Tsukamoto, S. Hirose, "Shape Memory Alloy Servo Actuator with Electrical Resistance Feedback and Application for Active Endoscope", discussed above, which measure the resistance during the off-period of the PWM pulse. The system is also much more compact than that described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,763,979, discussed above, because it eliminates one high current switch per actuator, realizing significant space and cost savings since in most cases these switches are the largest and most expensive part of the controller.
While the multiplexer may select the actuators to be sampled sequentially in a round-robin fashion, an alternative sampling scheme increments the multiplexer to the next actuator to be sampled taking current usage of the system into account. For example, actuators with a 0% duty cycle (i.e. off) can be skipped. In many applications only a limited number of the available actuators are actively heated at a particular time, so this approach can significantly increase the sample rate of those actuators being actively controlled.
PWM control is particularly attractive because many commercial micro-controllers contain built-in hardware for generating PWM signals, reducing the computational overhead on the controller; also, PWM output is often used in sound chips (such as those used in "talking" greeting cards and the like) as an inexpensive D-A conversion mechanism, making these low cost chips suitable as controllers for SMA actuators of this invention. For example, as two-channel sound chip could be used to generate both sound and motion in a low cost compact module. In some applications, full PWM control may not be required, and an inexpensive timer chip could be used to generate the required digital signals. Also, PWM control reduces current draw when a temperature signal (in effect, an Rsma signal) is available, because no current limiting resistor is needed to prevent overheating the SMA element. Also, because current flow in an SMA wire tends (as with all solid conductors) to be concentrated at the surface of the wire, there is the risk of "hot-spots" and uneven heat distribution, reducing the life of the wire. Pulsing the activating voltage allows for thermal conduction in the SMA wire to lead to more even heat distribution. Further, in a conventional DC control system, the SMA current is effectively constant and relatively low, because it is determined by the current-limiting resistor, the value of which is chosen to avoid overheating of the SMA element once it is fully contracted. In a PWM or pulsed scheme with resistance feedback, a high duty cycle can be used to heat the SMA element initially, leading to rapid initial movement. The duty cycle can be reduced when the SMA element reaches the desired position, supplying only enough power to maintain the SMA element in the desired state.
In a further aspect, this invention, rather than basing decisions for position control and calibration on instantaneous or peak resistance values, uses the memory and processing power of low cost embedded micro-controllers to analyze the behavior of resistance over time. This approach results in better performance for calibration and position control and also allows information to be extracted that was previously unavailable. In particular, the system can automatically adjust to SMA configurations within a wide operating range, can perform continuous calibration and position control, can detect the applied load on the actuator and can also detect mechanical obstructions of collisions between the actuator and some external object.
Next in
Since the detection of Rmin and Rmax depends entirely on the time-variance of resistance rather than its absolute value the system can dynamically adapt to SMA components of varying lengths. The constraints on the lengths that can be supported are: (1) the power supply used to heat the SMA must be capable of causing the SMA to reach the Af temperature, and (2) the resistance of the SMA must be large enough that the SMA does not reach Af and overheat more quickly than the control system can react. In practical terms this enables the same control system to adapt to SMA actuators in a wide range of sizes automatically; which is particularly attractive because in many applications the control system will be simultaneously controlling a number of actuators of different lengths simultaneously.
In an improved sensing circuit illustrated schematically in
When the PWM signal from position 1701 A goes to logic "0" (during the "off" part of the duty cycle), the switching transistor 1703 switches off current flow through the SMA element, and capacitor C1 immediately begins to discharge through the SMA element. Eventually the voltage at position 1701B falls below the transition threshold for that input, and the input switches from logic "1" to logic "0". By measuring the time taken for the capacitor C1 to discharge once the PWM signal goes to logic "0", the RC constant for RsmaC1 can be determined. Since C1 is constant, the value of Rsma can be determined; and, as discussed previously, this value will change during the martensite-austenite transition. A similar method comprises the SMA element and capacitor being in parallel between the switching transistor 1703 and Vsma instead of between the transistor 1703 and ground, so that the capacitor charge time rather than the discharge time would be measured and used to determine the value of Rsma. Other similar methods employing RC time constant measurement will be apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the art in light of this disclosure.
Having identified Rmin and Rmax by the above means during the first few cycles of heating and cooling, the control system can accurately report position based upon the output of a simple state machine that knows whether the wire is in the initial phase of heating, the linear section, or the top plateau.
After a few cycles of heating and cooling, the control system learns the size and duration of the initial resistance reversal and assumes that this is the unloaded state. In future cycles, the system can report the load as a multiple or fraction of the initial load.
After a few cycles of heating and cooling, the control system develops an "expectation" of where the upper plateau will occur. If the plateau occurs at a higher resistance value than expected, then either the actuator has been mechanically obstructed or the thermal environmental conditions have changed such that the power supply can no longer provide enough power to reach A, (e.g. the SMA wire may be being cooled by thermal contact with a cool body or a cooling air stream may be impinging on it). In many application categories the probability of the change in thermal environmental conditions is low, and so the system can assume mechanical obstruction. In fact, the system can even deduce how far along the stroke the obstruction occurred based upon where in the linear part of the curve the plateau occurred.
Finally, sudden spikes in voltage or absence of voltage during heating can be interpreted by the software as either an open circuit or short circuit condition and appropriate steps can be taken to ensure a safe and orderly shutdown of the system. Fine SMA wires burn when substantially overheated and can be an ignition source in flammable environments.
While some prior SMA devices have determined position or load on a single actuator, an attractive feature of this invention is that when opposed actuators are used (as is general in sophisticated applications), measurements may be made using only the activated actuator. Measurement only on the heated contracting SMA wire avoids dealing with the inherent hysteresis of the SMA transition and enables accurate position and load measurement, and position control, since the unheated wire of the opposed but unenergized actuator functions purely as a low force constant spring force.
Since all of the features being recognized by the software are simple, very little computation (beyond some basic filtering) is required. This means that the system can be implemented entirely in hardware as an application-specific integrated circuit or in software on a low cost embedded micro-controller.
For systems without feedback, only one micro-controller pin is required per actuator; however, if several actuators are required to be driven simultaneously (such as three legs of a six-legged walking toy), a single output pin can be used to drive several switching transistors and hence control several actuators. When spring bias is used, the number of actuators decreases; and hence a six-legged walker with spring bias requires as few as four output pins--two each ("lift" and "move forward") for each of two sets of legs. For systems with feedback, two pins are required per actuator--one for PWM output and the other for position sensing input; and if a capacitive sensing scheme is used, a timer input pin per actuator is also required. Multiplexers may of course be used if necessary to reduce the number of input pins required. The number of output pins may also be reduced by using a multi-channel driver chip, such as an Allegro UDN5832, which contains 32 high current output drivers and a serial peripheral interface over which serial bits can be sent and latched into the drivers. In systems with many SMA actuators, the computational overhead of controlling the actuators may become significant. By far the most computationally intensive activity of the controller is the generation of PWM signals for many channels and servicing the interrupts for the sensor feedback values. If the PWM signals are generated entirely in software (no PWM hardware on the chip), then an 8 MHz Motorola HC08 microcontroller can only drive about twelve actuators simultaneously. However, PWM generation can easily be implemented in hardware, and a custom chip could be developed that would contain multiplexers, PWM generators, and sensing pins, and this could communicate with the microcontroller using a serial peripheral interface, thus increasing the number of actuators that could be controlled.
One of the many potential applications of the SMA actuators of this invention is in small mobile robots or robotic toys. One toy that has been created is a six legged robotic walking insect. SMA actuators are used to provide life-like animation and mobility.
By controlling the degree of contraction of each of the two actuators connected to the leg, the foot of the leg can be made to describe any arbitrary path within a rectangle defined by the range of motion of the actuators.
The remaining five legs are attached in a similar manner, as are two pincers (though these require only one actuator per pincer, as shown in
An inexpensive 8 bit micro-controller, such as the Motorola MC68HC08MP16 mentioned above can be used to generate the required PWM signals and to measure the changing resistance values of the fourteen actuators used. Software can then command each of the six legs to move to specific positions and to determine when that position is achieved. In this way a walking algorithm, such as the tripod gait, which is widely described in the literature [see, for example, C. Ferrell, A Comparison of Three Insect Inspired Locomotion Controllers, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Memorandum, Cambridge Mass., USA; and M. Binnard, Design of a Small Pneumatic Walking Robot, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge Mass., MS Thesis, 1995] can be easily implemented; and the pincers may be made to open and close.
It will be evident to a person of ordinary skill in the art that numerous modifications may be made to such a robot or toy, for example, using a single actuator to close both pincers, using opposed pairs of actuators rather than spring-opposed actuators, etc., depending on the level of design and engineering sophistication desired. Similar design techniques may be used to accomplish any of the many tasks for which SMA actuators may be useful, and a designer/manufacturer of ordinary skill in the art of SMA actuators and their use should be able to design/manufacture SMA actuators and devices containing them without undue experimentation. It will also be evident that the sensing and control aspects of this invention are applicable generally to all SMA actuators and devices containing them, and their use is not limited to the stroke-multiplying SMA actuators of the first and second aspects of this invention. Thus the sensing and control aspects of this invention may also be used in conventional straight wire, coiled wire, or other SMA actuators such as are already known to the art and described, for example, in the documents cited in this application as representative of the knowledge of the art.
The software needed to implement the various functions, including sensing and control functions, for the SMA actuators of this invention will be readily accomplished by a person of ordinary skill in the art of SMA actuators and their use, having regard to their skill and the information available to such a person, including the documents referred to in this application, and the disclosure herein.
As discussed in the Summary of the Invention, this invention also includes other actuators using electromechanically active materials (materials that expand or contract on the passage of an electric current or the application of an electric potential to them other than through the normal processes of thermal expansion and contraction of the type that are normally linear with temperature over a wide temperature range). Such materials include, for example, piezoelectric materials and certain electro-active polymers. These materials typically exhibit only very limited expansion or contraction when electrically activated, and devices employing them as actuators will typically be adaptable to stroke multiplication of the type discussed in this application in detail for actuators comprising shape memory alloy elements. Also, the control and sensing techniques will be equally appropriate for such other actuators. Thus, when the term "SMA actuator" is used herein, unless the context makes it apparent that it refers only to an actuator comprising shape memory alloy elements, it should be construed as including actuators employing elements comprising electromechanically active materials, especially shape memory alloys.
Various modifications and variations of the present invention will be apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Although the invention has been described in connection with specific preferred embodiments, it should be understood that the invention as claimed should not be unduly limited to such specific embodiments. Indeed, various modifications of the described modes for carrying out the invention which are obvious to persons of ordinary skill in the art are intended to be within the scope of the following claims.
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